Answer:
It means to favor one arty over the other.
Explanation:
Answer:
Yes I have persevered in order to achieve a goal. When I was bad at tennis, I played for 6 hours every day for 3 months and now I am a nationally recognized player. I have witnessed my friends persevere and practice before they go to a competition. I have given up on inventing a product, but instead I sold my idea for $150,000.
Explanation:
I appreciate a capitalist system which allows the market to compete unencumbered, with few restraints. However, when individuals or organizations are able to dictate with life-threatening decisions based on money and not humanity, then I call for a revolt. The pleasures of love and life, a marriage bound by sacred vows, surely these things possess a value which far outweigh the interests of someone who is unwilling to part with their commodity. If there is no room for compromise from the pharmaceutical industry for delayed payments or payments with interest over time, then I say steal the drug.
(What I think is the) answer:
How someone talks of something through their perspective.
Explanation:
With a colleague (workplace mate) you'd talk from a professional standpoint but if you were to talk with a friend you'd speak more casually about stuff.
The literary work that "formally" announced the establishment of the romantic revolt in english poetry is lyrical ballad.
Answer: C) When Alex came home, his parents were waiting up for him.
Explanation: a misplaced modifier is a word, phrase, or clause that is improperly separated from the word it modifies or describes. Because of the separation, sentences with this error often sound awkward, ridiculous, or confusing. In the sentence A, it isn't clear who was driving (the bears or the speaker), in sentence B, it isn't clear who was snoring (the alarm or the speaker), in sentence D it is unclear what was eight feet long (the surfboard or the store), so the sentence that uses a modifier correctly, is the corresponding to option C.